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Dockerbeat - the elastic Beat for docker daemon monitoring

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Dockerbeat

(if you're on the fast lane, check the TL;DR at the bottom of the readme)

Build status : Build Status

Test coverage : codecov.io

Dockerbeat is the Beat used for docker daemon monitoring. It is a lightweight agent that installed on your servers, reads periodically docker container statistics and indexes them in Elasticsearch.

We've reached the Release Candidate 1 : it's almost stable today, some minor issues can still appear.

Exported document types

There are five types of documents exported:

  • type: container: container attributes
  • type: cpu: container CPU usage statistics. One document per container is generated.
  • type: net: container network statistics. One document per network container is generated.
  • type: memory: container memory statistics. One document per container is generated.
  • type: blkio: container io access statistics. One document per container is generated.
  • type: log: dockerbeat status information. One document per tick is generated if an error occurred.

To get a detailed list of all generated fields, please read the fields documentation page.

Elasticsearch template

To apply Dockerbeat template (recommended but not required) :

curl -XPUT 'http://elastic:9200/_template/dockerbeat' -d@etc/dockerbeat.template.json

Build Dockerbeat

Ensure that this folder is at the following location: ${GOPATH}/github.com/ingensi

Requirements

Build

To build the binary for Dockerbeat run the command below. This will generate a binary in the same directory with the name dockerbeat.

make

Run dockerbeat

Project compilation generate a dockerbeat executable file in the root directory. To launch dockerbeat, run the following command:

./dockerbeat -c etc/dockerbeat.yml

Run in a docker container

The easiest way to launch dockerbeat is to run it in a container. To achieve this, use the ingensi/dockerbeat docker image, available on the docker hub.

Docker run command should:

  • mount the target Docker socket to /var/run/docker.sock
  • link an Elasticsearch node as elasticsearch

Example:

docker run -d -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
  --link elastic:elasticsearch ingensi/dockerbeat:1.0.0-rc2

To override the default configuration, just link yours to /etc/dockerbeat/dockerbeat.yml:

docker run -d --link elastic:elasticsearch \
  -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
  -v /volumes/dockerbeat-config/:/etc/dockerbeat \
  ingensi/dockerbeat:1.0.0-rc2

By default, when dockerbeat is running from this image, it logs into the /var/log/dockerbeat directory. To access this logs from the host, link a directory to the dockerbeat logging directory:

docker run -d --link elastic:elasticsearch \
  -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
  -v /volumes/dockerbeat-config/:/etc/dockerbeat \
  -v /volumes/dockerbeat-logs/:/var/logs/dockerbeat \
  ingensi/dockerbeat:1.0.0-rc2

Configuring Dockerbeat

Dockerbeat configuration file is located at etc/dockerbeat.yml. This default template provides the following environment variable mapping:

  • How often to read server statistics
    • ENV : PERIOD
    • Beats variable : input.period
    • Default value : 5
  • Docker socket path
    • ENV : DOCKER_SOCKET
    • Beats variable : input.socket
    • Default value : unix:///var/run/docker.sock
  • Enable TLS encryption
    • ENV : DOCKER_ENABLE_TLS
    • Beats variable : input.tls.enable
    • Default value : false
  • Path to the CA file (when TLS is enabled)
    • ENV : DOCKER_CA_PATH
    • Beats variable : input.tls.ca_path
    • Default value : no default value
  • Path to the CERT file (when TLS is enabled)
    • ENV : DOCKER_CERT_PATH
    • Beats variable : input.tls.cert_path
    • Default value : no default value
  • Path to the KEY file (when TLS is enabled)
    • ENV : DOCKER_KEY_PATH
    • Beats variable : input.tls.key_path
    • Default value : no default value

When launching it inside a docker container, you can modify the environment variables using the -e flag :

docker run -d \
  -v /var/run/docker.sock:/another/path.sock  \
  --link elastic1:es1 \
  --link elastic2:es2 \
  -e PERIOD=30 \
  -e DOCKER_SOCKET=unix:///another/path.sock \
  ingensi/dockerbeat:1.0.0-rc2

Contribute to the project

All contribs are welcome! Read the CONTRIBUTING documentation to get more information.

TL;DR

I want to monitor a host : (If kibana can't join elastic, check its network configuration.)

$ docker network create dockernet

$ docker run -d --net=dockernet --name=elastic \
  -v /mnt/volumes/elastic/config:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config \
  -v /mnt/volumes/elastic/data:/usr/share/elasticsearch/data \
  elasticsearch:2.2.0

$ docker run -d --net=dockernet --name=kibana -p 5601:5601 \
  -e ELASTICSEARCH_URL=http://elastic:9200 \
  kibana:4.4.1

$ docker run -d --net=dockernet --name=dockerbeat \
  -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
  -v /mnt/dv/dockerbeat:/etc/dockerbeat ingensi/dockerbeat:latest

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Dockerbeat - the elastic Beat for docker daemon monitoring

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